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Telus outages and service status in Wynyard, Saskatchewan

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  • Telus generated 0 outage signals in the last 24 hours around Wynyard, including 0 direct reports.

Telus offers phone, internet and television services, as well as mobile phone and mobile internet service through Telus Mobility. Telus internet service uses DSL technology. Telus TV relies on satellite or internet television (IPTV). Telus' mobile phone network supports CMS, HSPA and LTE.

Problems in the last 24 hours in Wynyard, Saskatchewan

The chart below shows the number of Telus reports we have received in the last 24 hours from users in Wynyard, Saskatchewan and surrounding areas. An outage is declared when the number of reports exceeds the baseline, represented by the red line.

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Community Discussion

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Telus Issues Reports

Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:

  • Ceiba59Co
    Cindy O 🇨🇦❤️ 🖖 (@Ceiba59Co) reported

    @JonFraserTF @TELUS Yeah, I disengaged from Telus about 20 years ago - landline and internet. Customer 'service' was beyond dismal.

  • EhrmantrautCap_
    Ehrmantraut Capital (@EhrmantrautCap_) reported

    AmpliTech Group $AMPG and an overview of its customers: Telus $T.TO - 5G/O-RAN. AmpliTech has already secured a multi-year LOI from Telus and purchase orders. Telus furthermore needs 30,000 AmpliTech radios for its O-RAN buildout until 2029. With each unit costing atleast $10,000, you're looking at a minimum $300 million cumulative revenue until 2029, excluding service/maintenance/installation fees that AmpliTech can charge to Telus. $NVDA, Northeastern University - AI-RAN. Both $NVDA and $AMPG are part of the Open6G project at Northeastern University (supported by the US government), and it is likely that $NVDA is interested in $AMPG's proprietary O-RAN CAT B 64T64R Massive MIMO radio unit, which sends out signals based on NVIDIA AI Aerial's AI-driven calculations (running on Blackwell or Grace Hopper GPUs). $IBM, $AMZN - cryogenic LNAs for quantum. Quantum computers store info in qubits at a temperature of 4 Kelvin (-269 degrees Celsius), these give off very weak signals that need to be amplified without creating any noise. AmpliTech has cryogenic LNAs that can withstand these temperatures. $BA, $NOC, $LMT, US Air Force - LNAs for defense for the purpose of communications, radar and electronic warfare. AmpliTech has military-grade LNAs, that have passed years of qualifications and are fully produced in the US, an important requirement. NASA, $VSAT, $WBD, Paramount - SATCOM/satellite communications equipment. AmpliTech sells LNAs that allow LEO satellites and ground stations to pick up very weak signals and translate them into useful data. They also sell PAs (Power Amplifiers) that allow LEO sats to send signals across large distances. Rarely do you see a microcap with such an impressive list of customers. Below, a complete overview of AmpliTech's customers can be seen, which includes more than just the ones I mentioned above (picture is from @rk8215).

  • TypeVFuture
    TypeVFuture (@TypeVFuture) reported

    The BC government is investing 63 million to provide high-speed internet to 4,000 rural homes? It is planning to go through Telus which uses Starlink for in-flight services on Westjet. Why doesn't the government directly contract Starlink to provide those 4,000 homes the most reliable internet service on the planet for a fraction of the cost? No logic. We need to change that. 63 million is nuts!

  • kidrickhewat
    Rick Hewat (@kidrickhewat) reported

    @JonFraserTF @TELUS The telecom business is in decline. They cannot easily raise prices given global trends and Cdn consumers seeing global pricing. I live rurally and pay the same rate as a customer in an urban area for lessor service as coverage is gone outside of town. Good luck with Bell!

  • sck1919
    steviey19 (@sck1919) reported

    @DanielHill71510 @TELUS How were you getting charged for 2.5 years and not notice. Lmfao. At this point you’re an idiot.

  • MAAWLAW
    Mark Warner (@MAAWLAW) reported

    @TELUS "... @Telus says its SIM charge 'is not an administrative fee. A SIM card or an eSIM has always been a physical or digital product for purchase, rather than an administrative fee' [and] is meant to cover 'real costs' associated with providing a new SIM product to a customer..."🤔

  • JonFraserTF
    Jon Fraser (@JonFraserTF) reported

    Today I ended 18 years with @telus as my cell provider. Up until 6 months ago they had always been decent to deal with. Recently they had 3 major strikes against them and with my Bring-it-Back period ending this week, I decided it was time for a change. What should have been a straightforward process turned into a masterclass in Kafkaesque customer service - that will now stretch into tomorrow. If anyone is considering @telus - don't.

  • billycanada
    Dr. Billy Canada (@billycanada) reported

    @gatorgar Think long-term. In 3 to 4 years you won't be getting your phone service from AT&t or Telus or Bell or Rogers or whatever you'll get it from starlink. The AI that you use will be in starlink satellites. The taxi you take will be a robo taxi from Tesla. Tesla robots will be mowing your lawn too

  • chinoalemano
    ChinoAleman (@chinoalemano) reported

    First $NVDA (detective). Then $AMZN Kuiper (detective). Now Telus (detective). $AMPG is a diamond in the rough, and Johan just dug up the part almost nobody knew. Shouldn't be a billion company already? Crazy. Go read his thread. 👀 Here's the gist of what he found in the SEC filings: The 64T64R radio that now drives ~75% of AmpliTech's revenue? They didn't spend years building that IP from scratch. They bought it. In March 2025, AMPG acquired the full IP behind its 5G O-RAN radios from a private Delaware company, Titan Crest, for $8M, $3M cash, $5M in stock. And as Johan points out: The structure is the genius part. They didn't gamble $8M on unproven tech and pray a customer would show up. The bulk of the payment only triggered once a real Tier-1 carrier placed its order, and the filings name that carrier: Telus, one of Canada's big three. They paid for the IP only after the customer was already real. For a micro-cap, that's about as low-risk as an acquisition gets. Instead of burning years and millions on R&D... AMPG bolted its real strengths. RF engineering, US-based manufacturing, certifications, onto ready-made, validated IP. Years of time-to-market, erased. And on the final milestone, AMPG owns that IP outright, plus a 10-year non-compete locking the seller out. The flagship becomes fully, exclusively theirs. The chain Johan lays out is already live: → Titan built the tech. → AMPG turned it into a made-in-USA product. → Telus is deploying it. A sub-$200M company that bought the engine of its own growth, cheaply, almost risk-free, customer already locked in. Great find, @rk8215. This is the kind of DD that actually moves the needle. 🫡 Not financial advice. I'm long $AMPG. DYOR.

  • dergleen
    D Ranan (@dergleen) reported

    @JonFraserTF @TELUS They left my senior mom without a landline phone for 9 months because someone hit the box in her alley and they couldn’t be bothered to repair it. One day I was on hold for 4 hours to get through to a service agent. 🤬